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Medical History, 1999, 43: 155-172 Biomedical Communication and the Reaction to the Queensland Childhood Lead Poisoning Cases Elsewhere in the World JOHN C BURNHAM* Beginning in the 1890s, physicians in Queensland began reporting cases of lead poisoning in children. Lead poisoning up until that time-and for a long time after-was primarily an occupational disease, and the appearance of plumbism in children was therefore unusual, to say the least. As John Thearle has pointed out, the specific local events that brought Queensland physicians to interest themselves in the subject of lead poisoning in children constitute a striking incident in the history of medicine. Beyond that story, however, is what happened to the published reports of those physicians in the history of world medicine.1 The Queensland experience suggests not only dimensions of the history of lead poisoning in children but shows how biomedical knowledge was-and was not- communicated. Citation studies of biomedical publications confirm impressionistic evidence that writers in the medical literature tended to cite work from their own national medical publications, rather than using, in an even-handed way, what was available in the world.2 It is in this context of cultural provincialism that the fate of the reports from * John C Bumham, Departments of History and of 1987. I am preparing a book-length history of the Psychiatry, Ohio State University, 230 W 17th evolution of the syndrome of childhood lead Avenue, Columbus OH 43210-1367, USA. poisoning. Meanwhile the history of the problem has been reviewed by Jane S Lin-Fu, 'Historical I have most gratefully benefited from the support and perspective on health effects of lead', in K R assistance of many librarians, including those at The Mahaffy (ed.), Disease and environmental lead: Ohio State University, at the National Library of human health effects, Amsterdam, Elsevier Science Medicine in Bethesda, and at Yale University Medical Publishers, 1985, pp. 43-63, which summarizes and Library, and I want to recognize especially the contextualizes her previous publications on the assistance of Brenda Heagney and her staff at the subject, particularly Jane S Lin-Fu, 'Lead poisoning Royal Australasian College of Physicians library. A and undue lead exposure in children: history and summary of this paper was presented at the meetings current status', in H L Needleman (ed.), Low level of the Australian Society of the History of Medicine in lead exposure: the clinical implications of current Darwin, 7 July 1997, where participants offered useful research, New York, Raven Press, 1980, pp. 5-16. comments, for which, again, I am grateful, and I have The specific literature on lead poisoning in children had additional comments from Bryan Gandevia. exists, of course, in a context of a very extensive literature on the history of lead poisoning in general. Lorimer Dods, 'Some aspects of Australian 2 John C Burnham, 'The transit of medical ideas: pediatrics', Pediatrics, 1952, 10: 367-8, places the changes in citation of European publications in USA work on the Queensland lead poisoning cases among biomedical journals', Actas del XXXIII Congreso the major accomplishments in Australian paediatrics. International de Historia de la Medicina, Granada- Michael John Thearle, 'Dr. Alfred Jefferis Turner, Sevilla: 1-6 septiembre, 1992, Sevilla, Imprenta A 1861-1947', MD thesis, University of Queensland, Pinelo, 1994, pp. 101-12, cites relevant literature. 155 John C Burnham Queensland can best be understood. And yet in an exception that illuminates the way in which knowledge travelled, some of the work from Australia-work that had elements that were not just clinical observations-did, as will become clear, enter the world biomedical literature appropriately and in a timely way. An Epidemic of Lead Poisoning among Children The first report of lead poisoning in children in Queensland appeared in the transactions of the Intercolonial Medical Congress of Australia, meeting in Sydney in 1892. Additional reports followed. J Lockhart Gibson and other staff of the Brisbane Hospital for Sick Children decided that, beginning in 1890, they had seen ten cases of lead poisoning in children. The main differential signs that they used were the slow onset of muscular dysfunction and the development of foot drop, which a few European observers had noticed as characteristic of children, in contrast to the wrist drop found characteristically in adults. The chief text to which they could refer was a recent article by an American neurologist in a cyclopedia of diseases of children.3 Why, Gibson and his colleagues asked, had this affliction suddenly appeared in Queensland? Indeed, the first case was not diagnosed as lead poisoning because the idea just never occurred to anyone as a possibility. Among physicians in Brisbane, lead poisoning was known as an occupational disease, among "painters, compositors, &c." But there was no collective experience with non-occupational lead poisoning, such as that from drinking water, much less such an affliction in children.4 Miss Gillette, the matron at the hospital, thought that the source of the lead might be the foil in which the children's sweetmeats were wrapped. The children were known to chew the foil into balls and throw them at their playmates. "All the boys do it", noted one 3J Lockhart Gibson, et al., 'Notes on lead- offprint in the historical library, Royal Australasian poisoning as observed among children in Brisbane', College of Physicians, from the book, Broken Hill Intercolonial Medical Congress of Australasia, mines, 1968, there had been in fact one case, that of Transactions, 1892, pp. 76-83. It was ironic that, a two-year-old girl, which was among the few lead despite a common belief that wrist drop was not poisoning deaths recorded in connection with mining typical of lead poisoning in children, that symptom at Broken Hill in the period 1889-1891. She was the was what first directed attention to the possibility of "child of the manager of block 14, who was believed lead poisoning in the Queensland children. See to have been poisoned from a habit she had of Thearle, op. cit., note 1 above, p. 78, which contains a picking flowers bearing the visible particles of flue complete narrative of Turner's involvement in the dust which had fallen on them from the smelter stack cases. See also John Thearle, Four pioneers in public under the shadow of which she lived". It was known health in Queensland, Sydney, The Royal that dogs, cats, and fowl in the area all suffered Australasian College of Physicians, 1987. The casualties close to the smelters. By 1897, new cyclopedia article was J J Putnam, 'Toxic affections regulations had greatly reduced the plumbism in from arsenic and lead', in John M Keating (ed.), connection with the Broken Hill works. But as late as Cyclopedia ofthe diseases ofchildren, medical and 1902, it was believed by the health officer that water surgical, 5 vols, Philadelphia, J B Lippincott drained from roofs poisoned "the general Company, 1890, vol. 4, pp. 599-642, an article that population", who were urged always to use water was based almost entirely on the literature and to only obtained from the water company; Legislative a very slight extent on clinical experience (apparently Assembly. New South Wales. Board of Health. chiefly a family, including children, suffering from (Papers Respecting Allegations Made Against the the effects of lead in the drinking water). President of, In Connection with His Report on 4According to A G Cumpston, 'Health and Lead-Poisoning at Broken Hill), 4 December 1902. disease in the Broken Hill mining industry', an 156 The Reaction to the Queensland Childhood Lead Poisoning Cases patient. Three samples of the foil did show lead content, but most did not, and the physicians remained unconvinced that the foil was the culprit. Nor could they identify any other source of the lead.5 Gibson and his colleagues later believed that they were the first to confirm that lead poisoning produced symptoms distinctively different in children from those typical in adults-particularly the distribution of paralyses.6 One of the physicians, A Jefferis Turner, the resident medical officer at the Hospital for Sick Children who saw the first patient and suggested that lead poisoning was a possibility, reported that the diagnosis was met with much scepticism in the medical community. But thereafter he and Gibson were able to diagnose increasing numbers of cases of lead poisoning in children, to the point that Turner in 1897 concluded that "when any child of from five to eight years of age in Brisbane suffers from convulsions, in the absence of any discoverable cause lead should be thought of as a possible source of the trouble".7 Turner went on to explain what such a case was like, quoting from his notes on a case from Gympie seen in 1895: Child lies on face, embracing pillow with both arms. When pain comes on[,] the head is thrown back by spasmodic contraction of the back muscles, muscles of arm are in tonic spasm, legs flexed, hamstrings forcibly contracted, legs tender, the slightest touch causing the child to cry out; the abdomen is not tender, and stands firm pressure well. Mind is perfectly clear; the child is very intelligent. This condition lasted several days. The previous day it had been worse, the child screaming with pain.8 Meanwhile, Gibson added a special emphasis that came to mark observations of the Queensland cases: ocular neuritis. In 1892, Turner had reported five cases of what he and Gibson supposed was "basal meningitis", on the basis that "paralysis of the sixth nerves depended on organic disease in or near the base of the brain". By 1897, Gibson and Turner had decided that they had really seen another set of cases of lead poisoning (in part because all the victims had recovered, which would not have been expected in cases of meningitis).
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